News

These are the people running to replace Bottcher, who saw greener pastures elsewhere

ICE’s abuses of power, affordable housing, and the planned demolition and redevelopment of NYCHA’s Fulton and Elliott-Chelsea Houses were front and center at the Chelsea Reform Democratic Club’s Zoom forum on Monday, Jan. 27, featuring the four candidates for the Democratic nomination for City Councilmember representing Council District 3. The candidates are Leslie Boghosian Murphy, an

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Hoping to recover from ex-Mayor Adams’ historic disdain for landmark preservation

The pathways of Greenwich Village—full of lovely old human-scale buildings—can transport a dreamy pedestrian back in time. The Village is not your typical tower-filled Manhattan streetscape, and you can thank the landmarks law for that. The 1965 Landmarks Law allowed for the protection of individual buildings, plus swathes of neighborhoods—“historic districts”—deemed special because of their

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On his way out the door, Eric Adams does his best to demolish Dapolito and build Hudson Street mega tower

Ignoring community opposition, less than two weeks before ex-Mayor Adams’ term drew to a close, his administration gave the green light to the demolition of the landmarked Tony Dapolito Recreation Center at Clarkson and Varick Streets, as it approved the development of “Hudson Mosaic,” an apparently 350+-foot-tall tower at 388 Hudson Street, on a city-owned

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Pro-Tenant Law Stalled Following Adams Veto; Advocates Remain Hopeful, By Phyllis Eckhaus

On a freezing December afternoon, tenants and their advocates rallied outside 331 East 14th St, decrying their landlords’ years of efforts to force them out—subjecting them to broken locks and squatters, collapsed ceilings, no heat, no elevator, and no gas. One four-year tenant, Elliot, described enduring two winters without heat and the collapse of his

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End-of-year deadline for City Council to enact COPA legislation, by Phyllis Eckhaus

“New York City housing stock is being gobbled up by multinational investment companies, investment funds, and people who have tons of cash,” Brooklyn City Council Member Sandy Nurse declared. “To buy a home, it’s impossible, unless you have a million dollars.” Speaking on the steps of City Hall on Nov. 12, Nurse rallied an eager

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